New York Republicans and the National Republican Congressional Committee got off to an embarrassing start with their nominee's candidacy for the 4th Congressional District.
This week, the website for Jeanine Driscoll, a local tax receiver on Long Island, went live at this link — but reporters and campaign strategists immediately noticed something off.

"NRCC with another MASSIVE recruitment fail," wrote C.J. Warmke, the communications director for the Democratic-aligned House Majority PAC, in a post to X on Friday. "When you go to Jeanine Driscoll's website, disgraced Congressman Anthony D'Esposito's website appears. Disaster campaign launch!"
He included a screenshot of the site, which showed D'Esposito's face, name, and campaign branding.
As of press time, the site appears to have been closed to the public, with anyone attempting to access it prompted to enter a username and password. In a twist, however, the content that was actually supposed to be on Driscoll's campaign website appears to have been uploaded to a different URL: https://despositofostg.wpenginepowered.com/.
D'Esposito, currently serving as the inspector general for the U.S. Department of Labor, was previously elected to the usually Democratic-leaning 4th District in 2022, representing most of southern Nassau County just east of Brooklyn and Queens. However, he was defeated for re-election in 2024 by Democrat Laura Gillen.
Republicans had hoped he would run to take back the seat, giving them at least a known face in what is likely to be an extremely uphill battle in the 2026 midterm elections. However, he passed on doing so earlier this month, leaving the race to Driscoll.
This is not the first time New York Republicans have had to deal with a campaign launch website snafu. Last November, when Rep. Elise Stefanik launched her campaign for governor, her website was riddled with errors, "Lorem Ipsum Dolor" placeholder text, and appeared to be using a generic web template for a law firm.
Stefanik later ended her campaign, acknowledging there was no path to defeating Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul.

